John Milios
Nationalism as a Claim to a State
The Greek Revolution of 1821 and the Formation of Modern Greece
John Milios
Nationalism as a Claim to a State
The Greek Revolution of 1821 and the Formation of Modern Greece
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In theorizing on the causes, preconditions, dynamics and internal conflicts of the Greek Revolution of 1821, John Milios's analysis tackles the issue of bourgeois revolutions in general. This sweeping investigation of the historical emergence, and the limits of the Greek nation, calls forth the broader theoretical and historical question of the economic, political, and ideological presuppositions of nation-building. Nationalism as a Claim to a State illustrates how nationalism brings the masses to the political forefront, which the capitalist state then incorporates into its apparatuses as…mehr
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In theorizing on the causes, preconditions, dynamics and internal conflicts of the Greek Revolution of 1821, John Milios's analysis tackles the issue of bourgeois revolutions in general. This sweeping investigation of the historical emergence, and the limits of the Greek nation, calls forth the broader theoretical and historical question of the economic, political, and ideological presuppositions of nation-building. Nationalism as a Claim to a State illustrates how nationalism brings the masses to the political forefront, which the capitalist state then incorporates into its apparatuses as 'sovereign people'. Nationalism, being enmeshed within the political element, consists of the basis upon which irredentism develops, recruiting populations into the expansionist-imperialist strategies of the ruling classes.
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Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Haymarket Books
- Seitenzahl: 272
- Erscheinungstermin: 27. Februar 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 15mm
- Gewicht: 367g
- ISBN-13: 9798888902080
- Artikelnr.: 69921711
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: Haymarket Books
- Seitenzahl: 272
- Erscheinungstermin: 27. Februar 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 15mm
- Gewicht: 367g
- ISBN-13: 9798888902080
- Artikelnr.: 69921711
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
John Milios is Professor Emeritus of Political Economy at the National Technical University of Athens. He has published many articles and monographs on Marxist economic theory and history, including The Origins of Capitalism as a Social System.
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Part 1 The Nation and the Revolution
1 The Revolution in Moldavia and Wallachia: Questions on the Borders of the
Greek Nation
1 The Declarations of Alexandros Ypsilantis: Hellas in Serbia and Bulgaria
2 The Evolution and Failure of the Campaign in Moldavia and Wallachia
3 Questions for Consideration: Nation, State and Borders of Claimed
Territory
2 The ‘Hellas’ of 1821: Initial Thoughts on the Dissemination of Greek
National Politicisation
1 The Boundaries of ‘Hellas’, Beginning with Rigas Pheraios (1797) to 1821
2 Various Assessments of the ‘Transnational’ Element of the Revolution in
the National Historiography
3 Language, Origins and the ‘Plans of the Friends’
3 Approaches to the Nation: A General Theoretical Assessment
1 The Traditional Ethnocentric Approach
2 The ‘Objective’ Approach
3 The ‘Subjective’ Approach
4 The Priority of the Political Element: The Nation as State-Instituted
‘Popular Will’
5 The Nation of Capital: Further Points on a Theory of the Nation
4 Romans and Greeks in the Ottoman Empire: From Pre-national Social
Cohesion to a Greek Nation
1 Introductory Remarks concerning the Birth of the Greek Nation
2 Remarks on the Structure of the Ottoman Empire
3 Language and the ‘Universalist Hermeneutics’ of Nationalism
4 The Chronicle of Galaxidi, or a Pre-national, ‘Roman’ Historical
Narrative of the period 981–1703
5 Two Events Non-national in Character
6 The Ottoman Empire and the Birth of the Greek Nation
Part 2 The Revolution and Its State
5 The First State of the Revolution: The Victorious Period (1821–1824)
1 Constitutions and Institutions: The Formation of a Bourgeois State
2 Lords, Politicians and Military Corps: The Political Uplifting of the
Masses
3 Political Trends and Civil Wars
4 Regarding Class Antagonisms within the Revolutionary Forces
6 The Ebb of the Revolution, the Intervention of the ‘Great Powers’ and the
End of Constitutional Republicanism (1825–1833)
1 The Unfavourable Turn in the War
2 International-Political Relations and Diplomatic Recognition of the
Greek state
3 Internal Conflicts, Dead-Ends, and the End of Constitutional
Republicanism
7 The Formation of a Capitalist State and Social Formation
1 The Revolution and Its State as a Point of No Return in the Process of
Consolidating Capitalist Social Relations
2 Capital as a Relationship: Manufacture, Shipping, Trade and Financial
aAtivities
3 Agricultural Production, Rural Property Relations and ‘National Lands’
4 Remnants and Resistance of the ‘ancien régime’
Part 3 The Revolution as the ‘Grand Idea’ and as the ‘Present’
8 ‘Hellenisation of the East’: The Vision and the Reality
1 A Partial Review: A Genuine Bourgeois Revolution
2 The Grand Idea of the Revolution
3 Greek and the Greek-Speaking Populations of the Ottoman Empire
4 The Economic Dimension of the Grand Idea
5 Contraction and the ‘Stability’ of the Grand Idea Following the
Development of Balkan Nationalisms
6 After the Grand Idea: ‘A Rupture within Continuity’
9 1821 ‘in the Present’: On the Ideological Uses of the Revolution
1 Introduction: on the Ideological Uses of History
2 The Tradition of the ‘Continuity of Hellenism’ and Its Transformations
in the Nineteenth Century
3 The Ideology of ‘National Continuity’ as a Devaluation of the Revolution
and as a Self-Contradiction
4 ‘National Continuity’ and Racism
5 Historical Approaches in the Context of the Left (1907–1946): From
Attempts at Scientific Analysis for the Documentation of a Socialist
Strategy to Ideological Uses of History
6 Does History Unite a Nation?
References
Index
Introduction
Part 1 The Nation and the Revolution
1 The Revolution in Moldavia and Wallachia: Questions on the Borders of the
Greek Nation
1 The Declarations of Alexandros Ypsilantis: Hellas in Serbia and Bulgaria
2 The Evolution and Failure of the Campaign in Moldavia and Wallachia
3 Questions for Consideration: Nation, State and Borders of Claimed
Territory
2 The ‘Hellas’ of 1821: Initial Thoughts on the Dissemination of Greek
National Politicisation
1 The Boundaries of ‘Hellas’, Beginning with Rigas Pheraios (1797) to 1821
2 Various Assessments of the ‘Transnational’ Element of the Revolution in
the National Historiography
3 Language, Origins and the ‘Plans of the Friends’
3 Approaches to the Nation: A General Theoretical Assessment
1 The Traditional Ethnocentric Approach
2 The ‘Objective’ Approach
3 The ‘Subjective’ Approach
4 The Priority of the Political Element: The Nation as State-Instituted
‘Popular Will’
5 The Nation of Capital: Further Points on a Theory of the Nation
4 Romans and Greeks in the Ottoman Empire: From Pre-national Social
Cohesion to a Greek Nation
1 Introductory Remarks concerning the Birth of the Greek Nation
2 Remarks on the Structure of the Ottoman Empire
3 Language and the ‘Universalist Hermeneutics’ of Nationalism
4 The Chronicle of Galaxidi, or a Pre-national, ‘Roman’ Historical
Narrative of the period 981–1703
5 Two Events Non-national in Character
6 The Ottoman Empire and the Birth of the Greek Nation
Part 2 The Revolution and Its State
5 The First State of the Revolution: The Victorious Period (1821–1824)
1 Constitutions and Institutions: The Formation of a Bourgeois State
2 Lords, Politicians and Military Corps: The Political Uplifting of the
Masses
3 Political Trends and Civil Wars
4 Regarding Class Antagonisms within the Revolutionary Forces
6 The Ebb of the Revolution, the Intervention of the ‘Great Powers’ and the
End of Constitutional Republicanism (1825–1833)
1 The Unfavourable Turn in the War
2 International-Political Relations and Diplomatic Recognition of the
Greek state
3 Internal Conflicts, Dead-Ends, and the End of Constitutional
Republicanism
7 The Formation of a Capitalist State and Social Formation
1 The Revolution and Its State as a Point of No Return in the Process of
Consolidating Capitalist Social Relations
2 Capital as a Relationship: Manufacture, Shipping, Trade and Financial
aAtivities
3 Agricultural Production, Rural Property Relations and ‘National Lands’
4 Remnants and Resistance of the ‘ancien régime’
Part 3 The Revolution as the ‘Grand Idea’ and as the ‘Present’
8 ‘Hellenisation of the East’: The Vision and the Reality
1 A Partial Review: A Genuine Bourgeois Revolution
2 The Grand Idea of the Revolution
3 Greek and the Greek-Speaking Populations of the Ottoman Empire
4 The Economic Dimension of the Grand Idea
5 Contraction and the ‘Stability’ of the Grand Idea Following the
Development of Balkan Nationalisms
6 After the Grand Idea: ‘A Rupture within Continuity’
9 1821 ‘in the Present’: On the Ideological Uses of the Revolution
1 Introduction: on the Ideological Uses of History
2 The Tradition of the ‘Continuity of Hellenism’ and Its Transformations
in the Nineteenth Century
3 The Ideology of ‘National Continuity’ as a Devaluation of the Revolution
and as a Self-Contradiction
4 ‘National Continuity’ and Racism
5 Historical Approaches in the Context of the Left (1907–1946): From
Attempts at Scientific Analysis for the Documentation of a Socialist
Strategy to Ideological Uses of History
6 Does History Unite a Nation?
References
Index
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Part 1 The Nation and the Revolution
1 The Revolution in Moldavia and Wallachia: Questions on the Borders of the
Greek Nation
1 The Declarations of Alexandros Ypsilantis: Hellas in Serbia and Bulgaria
2 The Evolution and Failure of the Campaign in Moldavia and Wallachia
3 Questions for Consideration: Nation, State and Borders of Claimed
Territory
2 The ‘Hellas’ of 1821: Initial Thoughts on the Dissemination of Greek
National Politicisation
1 The Boundaries of ‘Hellas’, Beginning with Rigas Pheraios (1797) to 1821
2 Various Assessments of the ‘Transnational’ Element of the Revolution in
the National Historiography
3 Language, Origins and the ‘Plans of the Friends’
3 Approaches to the Nation: A General Theoretical Assessment
1 The Traditional Ethnocentric Approach
2 The ‘Objective’ Approach
3 The ‘Subjective’ Approach
4 The Priority of the Political Element: The Nation as State-Instituted
‘Popular Will’
5 The Nation of Capital: Further Points on a Theory of the Nation
4 Romans and Greeks in the Ottoman Empire: From Pre-national Social
Cohesion to a Greek Nation
1 Introductory Remarks concerning the Birth of the Greek Nation
2 Remarks on the Structure of the Ottoman Empire
3 Language and the ‘Universalist Hermeneutics’ of Nationalism
4 The Chronicle of Galaxidi, or a Pre-national, ‘Roman’ Historical
Narrative of the period 981–1703
5 Two Events Non-national in Character
6 The Ottoman Empire and the Birth of the Greek Nation
Part 2 The Revolution and Its State
5 The First State of the Revolution: The Victorious Period (1821–1824)
1 Constitutions and Institutions: The Formation of a Bourgeois State
2 Lords, Politicians and Military Corps: The Political Uplifting of the
Masses
3 Political Trends and Civil Wars
4 Regarding Class Antagonisms within the Revolutionary Forces
6 The Ebb of the Revolution, the Intervention of the ‘Great Powers’ and the
End of Constitutional Republicanism (1825–1833)
1 The Unfavourable Turn in the War
2 International-Political Relations and Diplomatic Recognition of the
Greek state
3 Internal Conflicts, Dead-Ends, and the End of Constitutional
Republicanism
7 The Formation of a Capitalist State and Social Formation
1 The Revolution and Its State as a Point of No Return in the Process of
Consolidating Capitalist Social Relations
2 Capital as a Relationship: Manufacture, Shipping, Trade and Financial
aAtivities
3 Agricultural Production, Rural Property Relations and ‘National Lands’
4 Remnants and Resistance of the ‘ancien régime’
Part 3 The Revolution as the ‘Grand Idea’ and as the ‘Present’
8 ‘Hellenisation of the East’: The Vision and the Reality
1 A Partial Review: A Genuine Bourgeois Revolution
2 The Grand Idea of the Revolution
3 Greek and the Greek-Speaking Populations of the Ottoman Empire
4 The Economic Dimension of the Grand Idea
5 Contraction and the ‘Stability’ of the Grand Idea Following the
Development of Balkan Nationalisms
6 After the Grand Idea: ‘A Rupture within Continuity’
9 1821 ‘in the Present’: On the Ideological Uses of the Revolution
1 Introduction: on the Ideological Uses of History
2 The Tradition of the ‘Continuity of Hellenism’ and Its Transformations
in the Nineteenth Century
3 The Ideology of ‘National Continuity’ as a Devaluation of the Revolution
and as a Self-Contradiction
4 ‘National Continuity’ and Racism
5 Historical Approaches in the Context of the Left (1907–1946): From
Attempts at Scientific Analysis for the Documentation of a Socialist
Strategy to Ideological Uses of History
6 Does History Unite a Nation?
References
Index
Introduction
Part 1 The Nation and the Revolution
1 The Revolution in Moldavia and Wallachia: Questions on the Borders of the
Greek Nation
1 The Declarations of Alexandros Ypsilantis: Hellas in Serbia and Bulgaria
2 The Evolution and Failure of the Campaign in Moldavia and Wallachia
3 Questions for Consideration: Nation, State and Borders of Claimed
Territory
2 The ‘Hellas’ of 1821: Initial Thoughts on the Dissemination of Greek
National Politicisation
1 The Boundaries of ‘Hellas’, Beginning with Rigas Pheraios (1797) to 1821
2 Various Assessments of the ‘Transnational’ Element of the Revolution in
the National Historiography
3 Language, Origins and the ‘Plans of the Friends’
3 Approaches to the Nation: A General Theoretical Assessment
1 The Traditional Ethnocentric Approach
2 The ‘Objective’ Approach
3 The ‘Subjective’ Approach
4 The Priority of the Political Element: The Nation as State-Instituted
‘Popular Will’
5 The Nation of Capital: Further Points on a Theory of the Nation
4 Romans and Greeks in the Ottoman Empire: From Pre-national Social
Cohesion to a Greek Nation
1 Introductory Remarks concerning the Birth of the Greek Nation
2 Remarks on the Structure of the Ottoman Empire
3 Language and the ‘Universalist Hermeneutics’ of Nationalism
4 The Chronicle of Galaxidi, or a Pre-national, ‘Roman’ Historical
Narrative of the period 981–1703
5 Two Events Non-national in Character
6 The Ottoman Empire and the Birth of the Greek Nation
Part 2 The Revolution and Its State
5 The First State of the Revolution: The Victorious Period (1821–1824)
1 Constitutions and Institutions: The Formation of a Bourgeois State
2 Lords, Politicians and Military Corps: The Political Uplifting of the
Masses
3 Political Trends and Civil Wars
4 Regarding Class Antagonisms within the Revolutionary Forces
6 The Ebb of the Revolution, the Intervention of the ‘Great Powers’ and the
End of Constitutional Republicanism (1825–1833)
1 The Unfavourable Turn in the War
2 International-Political Relations and Diplomatic Recognition of the
Greek state
3 Internal Conflicts, Dead-Ends, and the End of Constitutional
Republicanism
7 The Formation of a Capitalist State and Social Formation
1 The Revolution and Its State as a Point of No Return in the Process of
Consolidating Capitalist Social Relations
2 Capital as a Relationship: Manufacture, Shipping, Trade and Financial
aAtivities
3 Agricultural Production, Rural Property Relations and ‘National Lands’
4 Remnants and Resistance of the ‘ancien régime’
Part 3 The Revolution as the ‘Grand Idea’ and as the ‘Present’
8 ‘Hellenisation of the East’: The Vision and the Reality
1 A Partial Review: A Genuine Bourgeois Revolution
2 The Grand Idea of the Revolution
3 Greek and the Greek-Speaking Populations of the Ottoman Empire
4 The Economic Dimension of the Grand Idea
5 Contraction and the ‘Stability’ of the Grand Idea Following the
Development of Balkan Nationalisms
6 After the Grand Idea: ‘A Rupture within Continuity’
9 1821 ‘in the Present’: On the Ideological Uses of the Revolution
1 Introduction: on the Ideological Uses of History
2 The Tradition of the ‘Continuity of Hellenism’ and Its Transformations
in the Nineteenth Century
3 The Ideology of ‘National Continuity’ as a Devaluation of the Revolution
and as a Self-Contradiction
4 ‘National Continuity’ and Racism
5 Historical Approaches in the Context of the Left (1907–1946): From
Attempts at Scientific Analysis for the Documentation of a Socialist
Strategy to Ideological Uses of History
6 Does History Unite a Nation?
References
Index